Kimberly Ellis was fined $1,000 after she was caught publishing detailed information about a case she was hearing on Facebook.

A Queens juror who blabbed about her trial on the social media site was slapped with a $1,000 fine after her detail-filled public postings about the robbery case she was hearing — and her admission that she was “dying from boredom” — resulted in a mistrial.

Kimberly Ellis admitted she goofed — and that she was sorry — after getting an earful from an irate judge and the Queens District Attorney’s office.

“I continued my personal life as if I was not there to judge a trial,” she told The Daily News. “It was my first time as a juror, and I was naive."

Asked if she was told not to post about the case on social media, Ellis said that was made “clear” to her.

“I failed to make the necessary changes in my daily life,” she said. “I feel terrible. I never meant to hurt anyone. I wasted a lot of people’s time and money, and I deeply regret what I did."

The Kew Gardens woman said she is a working mom employed by JPMorgan Chase and “absolutely frightened I will lose my job over this.”

“I have been here for 19 years,” she said. “They will not tolerate anything.”

Throwing herself at the mercy of public opinion, Ellis said she hopes the company cuts her a break.

“My ex-husband is disabled and I raise my two children,” she said. “I'm afraid this will impact them. I'm very scared."

Ellis was undone when she began posting details of jury deliberations about a 2014 robbery case — sometimes twice a day — from the Kew Gardens courthouse.

“Everything about this process is inefficient,” she complained in a Sept. 17 posting. “I’m trying to remain positive and centered but, truthfully, I’m dying from boredom.”

After the jury began deliberating, Ellis continued dishing — in detail — on Facebook.

“God help me,” she wrote in one posting. “The other jurors don’t trust the police and want to outright dismiss the confessions as well as the majority of the rest of the evidence. Tomorrow is going to be a very difficult day.”

One of Ellis’ Facebook friends just happened to be a former federal and Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office prosecutor — and she blew the whistle on the over-sharing juror.

“Now, can you tell me why you did this?” the judge asked, according to a court transcript.

“Well, I sometimes — I suppose I forget it’s so public and it’s Facebook and it’s something that I use a lot,” Ellis replied. “And I’m pretty quiet in my day-to-day dealings with people, so it’s just a way for me to, you know, express myself.”

“Even though you violated an expressed order from the Court not to do that?” the judge asked.

Ellis admitted that the court had made it clear to her that she was not to use social media while she was part of a jury.

(Kimberly Ellis/via Facebook)

“I wasn't thinking clearly,” Ellis replied. “I apologize.”

Margulis found Ellis in contempt of court and gave her some advice before dismissing her.

“It is in your best interests that you retain an attorney," the judge said.

With Ellis knocked off the jury and there being only 11 jurors left — and no alternates — the case was declared a mistrial.

Margulis, in the transcript, said Ellis’ actions cost taxpayers “thousands of dollars.”

“We had an interpreter in that case,” the judge said. “We have the court reporter, we have the clerk, and everybody else associated with the case and including the district attorney's time and effort and defense counsel.”

Also, the judge said, “one of the robbery victims because of what happened to her moved out of state and came back for the trial.”

“This is just wasted taxpayers’ money because of what the defendant did,” the judge said. “And it’s not that she was not aware.”